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Henry VIII

  • TV Movie
  • 2003
  • TV-14
  • 3h 13m
IMDb RATING
7.1/10
2.6K
YOUR RATING
Sean Bean, Helena Bonham Carter, and Ray Winstone in Henry VIII (2003)
Period DramaBiographyDramaHistoryRomance

Two part mini-series documenting the stormy thirty-eight-year reign of King Henry VIII.Two part mini-series documenting the stormy thirty-eight-year reign of King Henry VIII.Two part mini-series documenting the stormy thirty-eight-year reign of King Henry VIII.

  • Director
    • Pete Travis
  • Writer
    • Peter Morgan
  • Stars
    • Ray Winstone
    • Joss Ackland
    • Sid Mitchell
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.1/10
    2.6K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Pete Travis
    • Writer
      • Peter Morgan
    • Stars
      • Ray Winstone
      • Joss Ackland
      • Sid Mitchell
    • 48User reviews
    • 2Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 win & 1 nomination total

    Photos14

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    Top cast54

    Edit
    Ray Winstone
    Ray Winstone
    • Henry VIII
    Joss Ackland
    Joss Ackland
    • Henry VII
    Sid Mitchell
    • Young Henry VIII
    Charles Dance
    Charles Dance
    • Duke of Buckingham
    Mark Strong
    Mark Strong
    • Duke of Norfolk
    Assumpta Serna
    Assumpta Serna
    • Katherine of Aragon
    Thomas Lockyer
    • Edward Seymour
    William Houston
    William Houston
    • Thomas Seymour
    Danny Webb
    Danny Webb
    • Thomas Cromwell
    Guy Flanagan
    • Tall Servant
    David Suchet
    David Suchet
    • Cardinal Thomas Wolsey
    Scott Handy
    Scott Handy
    • Lord Henry Percy
    Helena Bonham Carter
    Helena Bonham Carter
    • Anne Boleyn
    Benjamin Whitrow
    Benjamin Whitrow
    • Thomas Boleyn
    Stephen Noonan
    • Spanish Ambassador
    John Higgins
    • Robert Barnes
    Michael Maloney
    Michael Maloney
    • Thomas Cranmer
    Edward Kelsey
    • Campeggio
    • Director
      • Pete Travis
    • Writer
      • Peter Morgan
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews48

    7.12.5K
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    Featured reviews

    Stupidityno1

    Good, but not great

    Well this is just another telling of the story of England's most famous monarch, and to be very honest, it was OK, but it's been done better before.

    It did have numerous strong points. Firstly, some of the wives came across particularly well. Helena Bonham Carter gave perhaps the best Anne Boleyn to date (it would be a battle with Dame Dorothy Tutin for the title), sticking to what is known about the real woman, whilst still giving a very moving performance. Katherine Parr, however brief her appearance may have been, was another winner in this production, as this is the first time her character has been accurately and well portrayed.

    The acting was very good overall, but Ray Winstone stuck out a little as the King. The rest of the cast were in Tudor mode, poshing it up and giving it their all, whilst he stuck to his usual cockney gangster style. However, this aside, he did portray the King well and was the first Henry VIII to date to show any form of remorse or concern following the execution of Anne Boleyn.

    However there were short falls. The single biggest problem was that it was all too glamourised - did we really need to see the executioner hold up Anne Boleyn's severed head? Did they really need to alter history and have the Queens beheaded before baying crowds, just for that dramatic effect?

    There were also some questionable interpretations of history. The Duke of Norfolk's role in Catherine Howard's downfall has been altered completely here (again, all done for thrills). Some scenes were very badly juxta-posed - to any viewer unfamiliar with the history behind this story, the film would give them the impression Jane Seymour had died after been punched in the face and thrown on the floor by her violent husband.

    Just as some wives came across well, the rest came across very badly. Katherine of Aragon, rather than the respected and virtuous woman history paints a picture of, is an incessant whinge here - there's nothing likeable at all in her. Anne of Cleves appears twice, but doesn't utter a word in either scene, so she doesn't come across at all. Jane Seymour was wooden - the portrayal of her arouses no feelings whatsoever.

    To summarise, it's all very glitsy and modern. The story is mistold in many key places. The only thing that really makes this worth watching is the star performance from Helena Bonham Carter. If you really want to see this story well told, invest some time and patience in watching the complete 1970 TV series 'The Six Wives of Henry VIII'.
    lilitha-1

    Bodice-Ripper Mentality

    Bodice-Ripper Mentality

    Henry as played by Ray Winstone is a brawling, bawling, beastly Bluebeard. I realize Henry VIII was a spoiled brat of a king, reigning at the time when being an absolute monarch meant something, but the Tudors were also craftily intelligent. This Henry just appears to be a demanding brute. There is very little attempt to portray his intelligence or his charm. He may have been king (and it's good to be king), but when he wanted to Henry could be charming. It doesn't come through here. The history itself is a bit screwy. Let's call it history lite. There is a bodice-ripper mentality to the writing. Let's get into the hairshirt with Katherine of Aragon or the sex with Anne Boleyn. Let's show brutal war at its most brutal. Yes, war really is horrid and the Renaissance Europe was a cruel place, but the feeling of this piece is not the historical value of violence and sex, but rather for their voyeuristic quality. It's a bit smarmy. The acting was melodramatic, relieved only by good performances by Charles Dance and Sean Bean and their characters die fairly quickly. This was 3 unpleasant hours that I don't want to repeat again. Classic classy British fair, NOT.
    7Leofwine_draca

    Fine Tudor TV with an awesome cast

    This BBC two-parter tells the story of Henry VIII and casts Ray Winstone in the titular role. Winstone, a much-mocked actor, seems to have a legion of detractors but I found him perfect in this part, playing a surprisingly emotional and unstable monarch.

    Given Henry's status as England's most famous king, the story is very familiar but that doesn't stop HENRY VIII from being a highly entertaining interpretation of the story. Of course, the pacing is super-fast seeing as six wives and all manner of political turmoil is compressed into just three hours, but it still has time to get all the important stuff in there.

    The budget seems higher than the Hollywood version of THE OTHER BOLEYN GIRL (maybe because money wasn't blown on needless 'star' names) with close attention to detail both in set and costume. The cast is simply excellent - not just in the supporting male characters (Mark Strong and Danny Webb are great bad guys, Charles Dance and Sean Bean are brief and tragic figures, David Suchet makes Wolsey his own) but particularly in the actresses playing Henry's wives.

    Of course, Helena Bonham Carter bags the headlining role of Anne Boleyn, and very good she is too. But Emilia Fox (as Jane Seymour) and an impossibly young Emily Blunt (as Catherine Howard) also deserve plaudits for their acting skills. Is this better than the Keith Michell version? No, but I'd say it was equally as good and a fittingly violent interpretation for our times.
    Xeresa6

    Don't Casting Directors ever look at pictures of historical personages?

    I knew that the picture was going to be full of imperfections they minute I saw that they had made Katherine of Aragon a dark-haired, dark-eyed stereotype of what a Spaniard is suppose to look like. Katherine of Aragon, contrary to her previous portrayals, was a pretty, highly intelligent and well-educated young woman with reddish gold hair and blue eyes.

    Moreover, she was infinitely more popular with the British people than Henry himself, and the Briitish people loathed Anne Boleyn for being the cause of hurting their beloved " Good Queen Catherine!"

    It was believed that only Catherine's abhorence of Civil War prevented a good portion of the people rising up against Henry when he first started divorce proceedings. Assumpta Serna did an excellent job as Catherine, but her character(in my opinion) was given short shrift in comparison with Helena Bonham Carter's Anne Boleyn. Miss Bonham Carter was also too pretty to play Anne Boleyn, who, according to her contemporaries, was sallow-faced, black haired and eyed, and not that attractive in looks. What Anne did possess was a great deal of wit, charm, and ambition. Both she and Catherine were women who demonstrated strength and courage in adversity. What they lacked was the ruthless selfishness of Henry V111 and his monumental self-absorbsation in getting his own way. None of this was adequately portrayed in this series by the actors.
    awriter2

    Couldn't they find someone younger and not pregnant for Anne?

    Good lord - the instant I saw Helena Bonham Carter appear as Anne in the first episode, I thought two things: one, she is definitely looking her "nearly forty" age, and two, she's at least four months pregnant! No one could miss her dress sticking out to *there* even if they tried, despite the voluminous material.

    I knew it wasn't my imagination when I found this in her biography:

    "Delivered her first child, a boy, Billy Ray, with boyfriend Tim Burton on October 6, 2003"

    That would have been just after shooting Henry VIII. I've enjoyed Carter's work over the years, but still - there are a zillion terrific English actresses who could have done (and looked!) the part equally as well.

    More like this

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    7.8
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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Marsha Fitzalan (Duchess of Norfolk) is, in real-life, the daughter of the 17th Duke and Duchess of Norfolk.
    • Goofs
      Immediately preceding the scene (interior) where the Pope is seen writing his refusal to divorce Henry VIII from Catherine of Aragon, there is a panoramic view of the Vatican (with St. Peter's basilica), implying that the Pope was in Rome/the Vatican at the time.DIn fact, the Pope was at Orvieto at the time, and it was there, in the Papal palace, where he wrote and signed this particular document.
    • Quotes

      Katherine of Aragon: What did I do to upset you? That a maid of mine should turn against me like this?

      Anne Boleyn: You failed to give England an heir.

      Katherine of Aragon: And that upsets you so?

      Anne Boleyn: What upsets the king upsets me.

      Katherine of Aragon: Let me tell you this. You want me to lie before God and admit my first marriage was consummated? Well, it was not. You want me to retire, and withdraw my daughter's claim as sole rightful heir to the throne? Well, I shall not. Not in a thousand years. Not if you rack me within an inch of my life. So, I hope you have the belly for a fight, Anne Boleyn. Because I'll fight you every inch of the way.

    • Crazy credits
      Helena Bonham Carter receives second-billing in both parts despite Anne Boleyn getting the chop in the first part. Her contribution in part 2 is the pre-title reprise and flashbacks all already shown in part 1.
    • Connections
      Edited into Honest Trailers: Lord of the Rings (2012)

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • October 12, 2003 (United Kingdom)
    • Country of origin
      • United Kingdom
    • Official site
      • PBS/Masterpiece Theatre (United States)
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Генріх VIII
    • Filming locations
      • Arundel Castle, Arundel, West Sussex, England, UK
    • Production companies
      • Granada Television
      • Power
      • Powercorp
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Budget
      • £6,000,000 (estimated)
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      3 hours 13 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Stereo
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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    Sean Bean, Helena Bonham Carter, and Ray Winstone in Henry VIII (2003)
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